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  • March 19, 1870
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 19, 1870: Page 2

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    Article ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT.—No. 2. ← Page 2 of 4
    Article ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT.—No. 2. Page 2 of 4 →
Page 2

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Illustrations Of The History Of The Craft.—No. 2.

Laurie —• and especially by German writers , * and though ifc may be true , that the terminology of the operative guild theory has only of late years assumed its present development and position among Masonic writers , yet we are bound , as it

appears to me , to accord in justice to Anderson and Preston , the credit of asserting and maintaining the true theory of the operative origin of

Freemasonry . A great deal of ridicule has been cast upon Anderson , especially , for the high-flown language in which he claims to carry up the antiquity of our Order to the earliest ages of the world , and for the free use he has undoubtedly made of even patriarchal

names-Yet it should be borne m mind , that he probably intended after all by such , language , only to state '¦ jaraphrasticaliy the old teaching of the connection supposed to exist between Freemasonry and the primajval and later mysteries . t

Accepting this view , that the early mysteries were the depositories of sacred truth , though by degrees debased and corrupted , Anderson with many others seems to have held that Freemasonry still retains in its carefully preserved inner

teaching some traces of these earlier mysteries , and that it was in itself therefore as old as the patriarchs , and coeval with the first germs of civilisation amono- mankind !

It must however fairly be admitted , that he has unwisely claimed " nominatim " as patrons and members of our Order , many whose affiliation to Freemasonry could be only at the best but a legendary tradition , and that he has allowed the influence of this old and attractive theory to outweigh the more sober claims of historical evidence

and practical accuracy . Let ns , however , return to the more immediate subject matter . There are three views apparently of the guild vheory , which merit our present and careful consideration : —

1 . —There is the view for instance , of our ' earned German brother . Dr . Findel , to which we ¦ vill give our first attention . If we understand his words rightly in his very valuable and interesting History of Freemasonry , he accepts without reserve the guild theory , and

Illustrations Of The History Of The Craft.—No. 2.

looks upon our modern Order as the direct continuation , though somewhat developed and expanded by the revival of 1717 , of the operative guilds . He advocates distinctly and "without doubt the operative origin of Freemasonry ; and though it

is not quite clear from his valuable work whether he accepts our modern ritual and organisation as identical in all respects with that of the operative fraternity , yet he seems to do so , inasmuch as he more than once advocates the view I have

often contended for , that the ritual and ceremonies and oral teaching and mystic symbolism of the purely operative lodges were to a great extent under the direction and approval of the monastic orders .

The great value of our learned brother ' s history to the Masonic student consists in this , that he so ably points out the real operative origin of Freemasonry ; that he introduces with great clearness in support of his argument , the rules and

regulations , the customs and traditions of the operative German Masons , clearly proving a similarity of usage and identity of symbols between them and our Speculative brotherhood to-day . The peculiarity of Bro . Finders view consists

in this , that he assigns the origin of the Masonic Order , as an operative institution only , to the German " Steinnietzen , " or stonemasons of the middle ages , and ^ seems to fix on the beginning of the 11 th century as the epoch when we have

for the first time satisfactory evidence of their existence and proceedings and purpose . And though it must be ever most interesting to all Freemasons , thus to be able to trace the history of the German operative " Bauhiifcten " or lodges

through several centuries , yet it would be , I venture to think , most unsafe as it is in truth impossible to contend , or seriously for one moment to suppose , that Preemasonry could have thus sprung up all of a sudden in the history

of the world—could with all its old legends and tim e-honoured traditions andmysterioussymbolism , have been alone the product of the ingenuity and skill of German' stonemasons , and transplanted from Germany to England .

Our learned brother ' s argument , that because he finds the legend of the " Four Crowned Martyrs " in our earliest known Masonic MS ., and traces , as he thinks , of " Vehmic " usages in the Sloane MS . 8329 * therefore our English Free-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-03-19, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19031870/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT.—No. 2. Article 1
THE RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Article 4
THE HAUGHFOOT LODGE AND SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 6
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 11. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
MASONIC MEMS Article 12
Craft Masonry. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
TURKEY. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 17
SOUTH AFRICA. Article 18
INAUGURATION OF THE MASONIC HALL, SUNDERLAND. Article 19
SOUTH EASTERN MASONIC ASSOCIATION. Article 19
Obituary. Article 20
SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS FOR THE WEEK. Article 20
LIST OF LODGE, MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 26TH MARCH, 1870. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Illustrations Of The History Of The Craft.—No. 2.

Laurie —• and especially by German writers , * and though ifc may be true , that the terminology of the operative guild theory has only of late years assumed its present development and position among Masonic writers , yet we are bound , as it

appears to me , to accord in justice to Anderson and Preston , the credit of asserting and maintaining the true theory of the operative origin of

Freemasonry . A great deal of ridicule has been cast upon Anderson , especially , for the high-flown language in which he claims to carry up the antiquity of our Order to the earliest ages of the world , and for the free use he has undoubtedly made of even patriarchal

names-Yet it should be borne m mind , that he probably intended after all by such , language , only to state '¦ jaraphrasticaliy the old teaching of the connection supposed to exist between Freemasonry and the primajval and later mysteries . t

Accepting this view , that the early mysteries were the depositories of sacred truth , though by degrees debased and corrupted , Anderson with many others seems to have held that Freemasonry still retains in its carefully preserved inner

teaching some traces of these earlier mysteries , and that it was in itself therefore as old as the patriarchs , and coeval with the first germs of civilisation amono- mankind !

It must however fairly be admitted , that he has unwisely claimed " nominatim " as patrons and members of our Order , many whose affiliation to Freemasonry could be only at the best but a legendary tradition , and that he has allowed the influence of this old and attractive theory to outweigh the more sober claims of historical evidence

and practical accuracy . Let ns , however , return to the more immediate subject matter . There are three views apparently of the guild vheory , which merit our present and careful consideration : —

1 . —There is the view for instance , of our ' earned German brother . Dr . Findel , to which we ¦ vill give our first attention . If we understand his words rightly in his very valuable and interesting History of Freemasonry , he accepts without reserve the guild theory , and

Illustrations Of The History Of The Craft.—No. 2.

looks upon our modern Order as the direct continuation , though somewhat developed and expanded by the revival of 1717 , of the operative guilds . He advocates distinctly and "without doubt the operative origin of Freemasonry ; and though it

is not quite clear from his valuable work whether he accepts our modern ritual and organisation as identical in all respects with that of the operative fraternity , yet he seems to do so , inasmuch as he more than once advocates the view I have

often contended for , that the ritual and ceremonies and oral teaching and mystic symbolism of the purely operative lodges were to a great extent under the direction and approval of the monastic orders .

The great value of our learned brother ' s history to the Masonic student consists in this , that he so ably points out the real operative origin of Freemasonry ; that he introduces with great clearness in support of his argument , the rules and

regulations , the customs and traditions of the operative German Masons , clearly proving a similarity of usage and identity of symbols between them and our Speculative brotherhood to-day . The peculiarity of Bro . Finders view consists

in this , that he assigns the origin of the Masonic Order , as an operative institution only , to the German " Steinnietzen , " or stonemasons of the middle ages , and ^ seems to fix on the beginning of the 11 th century as the epoch when we have

for the first time satisfactory evidence of their existence and proceedings and purpose . And though it must be ever most interesting to all Freemasons , thus to be able to trace the history of the German operative " Bauhiifcten " or lodges

through several centuries , yet it would be , I venture to think , most unsafe as it is in truth impossible to contend , or seriously for one moment to suppose , that Preemasonry could have thus sprung up all of a sudden in the history

of the world—could with all its old legends and tim e-honoured traditions andmysterioussymbolism , have been alone the product of the ingenuity and skill of German' stonemasons , and transplanted from Germany to England .

Our learned brother ' s argument , that because he finds the legend of the " Four Crowned Martyrs " in our earliest known Masonic MS ., and traces , as he thinks , of " Vehmic " usages in the Sloane MS . 8329 * therefore our English Free-

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